Notre Dame plays its final home game of the season on Saturday afternoon against Boston College. The Irish are trying to repeat last year’s performance in November by closing the season with four consecutive wins and a victory in a bowl matchup that is still to be determined. The team edged into the Top 25 after last week’s defeat of Maryland, and is looking to move up the rankings as other teams falter down the stretch. Although two early defeats have lowered their ceiling in 2011, the Irish can quash any discussion that they have underachieved or disappointed this season by winning their remaining games.

This will be the third consecutive matchup with a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and the Irish are heavily favored to complete the trifecta. The Eagles have struggled on offense throughout the season and have also been bitten with the injury bug. Coach Frank Spaziani has taken some heat for the team’s 3-7 record, but he has a very young roster. The Eagles list only two seniors among their 22 starters and just three more as backups.

Several Notre Dame seniors will make their last appearance in the Stadium. Ethan Johnson, Darius Fleming, Robert Blanton, Gary Gray and Harrison Smith lead the defense while David Ruffer, Trevor Robinson, Taylor Dever, Jonas Gray and Michael Floyd will complete their college careers this season. Several reserves are also in this category including linebacker Steve Filer and guard Andrew Nuss, and other seniors such as quarterback Dayne Crist have eligibility remaining but may nonetheless elect not to return in 2012.

The Irish offense is in relatively good health. Theo Riddick is the only starter that may not play, but Robby Toma has proven to be a capable reserve. The defense has already lost end Kapron Lewis-Moore, therefore Johnson’s return to the lineup is very timely. Manti Te’o is obviously not at his best since being hobbled by an ankle injury but Aaron Lynch has played very well through a less serious sprain. The Eagles have lost three valuable senior starters for the rest of the campaign. Tailback Montel Harris, wide receiver Ifeani Momah and defensive lineman Kaleb Ramsey are gone and two additional starters on defense are questionable after missing last week’s game against NC State.

NOTRE DAME’S OFFENSE vs. BOSTON COLLEGE’S DEFENSE

Junior middle linebacker Luke Kuechly leads Boston College with an incredible 168 tackles, ten tackles for loss and a pair of interceptions. He is clearly an impact player and will create headaches for Irish center Mike Golic, Jr. and the rest of the Irish offense. Ramsey was the only returning starter on the Eagle defensive line, and his injury leaves end Max Holloway as the most experienced player up front. Freshman tackle Dominic Appiah has also shown promise.

Weak side linebacker Kevin Pierre-Louis has been very productive alongside Kuechly, however he has been injured of late and his status for Saturday is uncertain. Fortunately for the Eagles, freshman Sean Duggan has been outstanding in relief and sophomore Steele Divitto is a rapidly improving linebacker on the strong side. Cornerback Donnie Fletcher is the only senior in the secondary, and Boston College may be without his running mate Jim Noel who is also injured. Freshman Manny Asprilla will get the start if Noel isn’t ready to go. He will join classmate Spenser Rositano, who holds down the strong safety position. Both have played reasonably well to date despite a lack of experience.

Despite their obvious weaknesses and youth, the Eagles have a competitive defense and do not surrender easily in the red zone. The linebackers hit everything that moves and Spaziani’s scheme effectively funnels plays to Kuechly and his wingmen to shed blocks and make tackles. The Irish have too many weapons and an advantage along the front line to be stopped from scoring points, but they will have to work hard for them. An area of good news for Notre Dame is that Boston College has been largely unable to pressure the quarterback or force turnovers this season despite its talented corps of linebackers.

Coach Brian Kelly increased the tempo of his offense last week with positive results, and fans can expect more of the same in this game. Rapid fire plays will make it difficult for the Eagles to substitute out of its standard 4-3 alignment and create an advantage for Tommy Rees and his receivers. Lack of depth and fatigue may also impact Boston College. The statistics indicate that they surrender most of their points in the second and fourth quarters.

BOSTON COLLEGE’S OFFENSE vs. NOTRE DAME’S DEFENSE

Chase Rettig made his starting debut as a freshman last year against Notre Dame, and he has continued in that role in 2011 through the first ten games. Rettig is a 53% passer with ten interceptions and nine touchdown passes, and the loss of Momah in the season opener has certainly been a factor. Colin Larmond has become the team’s best receiving threat while Bobby Swigert leads the team in receptions with 35. Alex Amidon (18 receptions) is the third man in the Eagles’ three receiver set and 6’6” tight end Chris Pantale (12 receptions) is used mainly as a blocker.

The team struggled in the running game after Harris went down and is still in search of a permanent solution. Sophomore Deuce Finch had 243 yards against Maryland but coughed up two costly fumbles in his next outing against Florida State. Sophomore Andre Williams was given the start last week, although it is likely that both he and Finch will share the workload at Notre Dame.

Center Mark Spinney is the only senior among the starting eleven on an offensive unit that has not been very productive. Aside from a 45 point outburst against Division 1-AA Massachusetts, Boston College has managed to exceed 19 points only once this season. Rettig is primarily a pocket passer and the lack of playmakers around him should make it possible for the normally conservative Irish to take a few chances on defense rather than sit back and give up the short passes. If Rettig is ineffective, Spaziani may insert Josh Bordner into the game to provide a better running threat.

The Eagles run the ball 57% of the time and will try to establish a credible ground attack. The offensive line has good size but has only managed to carve out a paltry 3.7 yards per rush. Their conversion rate on third down is below average, and the Irish can make it a long day for Rettig if they are able to stop the run.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Kicker Nate Freese and punter Ryan Quigley are returning starters for the Eagles, and both do an adequate job. Freese has a strong leg and has hit a three-pointer from 52 yards this season, but he is only nine of 15 with several misses in the 30-40 yard range. Quigley does a good job of pinning the opponent inside the 20 and preventing more than a token return. In that regard, he should have nothing to worry about on Saturday.

Spiffy Evans is the primary kickoff return man, and with a name like Spiffy one can be certain that he runs fast. He is joined on the back line by Amidon and Tahj Kimble. Evans and Swigert handle the punt returns. The Eagle return teams have generated only modest success with no long gains, and they have given up a 100-yard kickoff return this season.

The Irish will continue to try to spring George Atkinson on kickoffs, while any efforts to generate a punt return appear to have been abandoned. In a more positive vein, punter Ben Turk and kicker David Ruffer have excelled of late and give Notre Dame an advantage in both departments.

SUMMARY

Boston College will try to run the ball to shorten the game and keep its defense fresh, and hope the Irish make a few mistakes that they can turn into points. The key for Notre Dame is to remain patient in its play selection while putting pressure on the Eagles with an up tempo rhythm. The Irish may not be able to win this game in the first quarter, but they can pull away in the second half if they don’t hand easy scoring opportunities to a very anemic opponent.

It will be interesting to see if Jonas Gray and Cierre Wood can break off runs of greater than 10 yards against Kuechly and his mates. If Kelly elects to rely more heavily on the passing game, the burden will once again fall upon Rees to be on target. The sophomore is coming off his best performance of the season last week against Maryland, but the Boston College defense is not quite so porous.

Here are a few questions that will have a bearing on the outcome:

Will the Eagles be able to run the ball effectively?

Can Rees turn in another flawless passing performance?

Will Kuechly single-handedly stuff Notre Dame’s rushing attack?

Will the Irish help the Eagles by making costly mistakes?

Can the BC defense hang on into the fourth quarter?

Will Robby Toma continue his exceptional play?

Can Rettig improve his 53% completion rate against the Irish defense?

If Notre Dame wins, will they immediately petition to join the ACC?

PREDICTION

The emotions of Senior Day are often a distraction for the home team, and Boston College always plays hard against Notre Dame. Consequently, the contest may be closer than expected throughout the first half. The more talented and deeper Irish should assume control later in the day, but a blowout win is not very likely. Hopefully for Irish fans, the issue will be decided in plenty of time to clear the bench and give all departing players a proper sendoff.

NOTRE DAME 30 BOSTON COLLEGE 13

27 Responses to “Irish Host BC on Senior Day”

In 1993 my (now) father-in-law, a Boston College fan, was in attendance for the ND/BC game which nobody in this online community needs a reminder of as far as the outcome. He came home proudly displaying to me a large hunk of natural grass he had taken from the field, which the visiting fans demolished (in addition to the visitors lockeroom). He will, once again, be in attendance for the match up this year. After we win, I am heading over to his house, taking a spade to his front lawn, and I’m sending an exact sized square of turf to the attention of Coach Kelly and the Fighting Irish football program. Does anyone know an address at which I can address this package?
Lets tune these boys up. Come on now Irish!

The 2011 Irish are so schizo that anything could happen especially given BC’s inferiority complex innate ability to rise to the occasion when confronting ND. I believe the Irish will pull out a win on saturday but probably will start slow and struggle a bit. Of course the true test of whether or not this team is ready for prime time or is just another pretty good second tier football team will come against the Cardinal. Go Irish!

I believe the Irish’s physical superiority upfront will be too much to handle for the undermanned BC Varsity football team that will be playing for pride more than anything else and will no doubt both literally and figuratively “spaz” out by the end of the third quarter but before Jonas Gray’s third TD of the afternoon and well before Mayock’s multiple attempts to remain neutral and right around the seventh installment of Washington Mutual’s increasingly annoying and overly dramatic commercial. Go Irish.

In 1992 ND played BC @ ND. In the 3rd quarter with the score something like 37-0 ND Craig Heinrich went back to punt. It was a fake punt and he ran for a 1st down. Not long after that the camera caught him standing on the sideline with his buddies having a laugh. Not long after THAT the camera caught the BC players watching this from the other side of the field. (Austin Collinsworth’s dad can attest to this.)

In sports when one team kicks the s..t out of another – that happens. But when that team rubs the other team’s nose in it – not good. The athletic gods (small g) notice that and they cast a curse on the offending team, in this case Notre Dame. The curse began the next year at the BC game and in this case has lasted 18 years and counting. The curses usually last until the offending team has shown that it realizes its mistake and has learned humility.

The tale is told of the ND – BC game a few years ago, which was played in Boston. In the locker room before the game the BC coach asked “how many of you were recruited by Notre Dame?” Not a hand went up.

BC 17 – 0.

Notre Dame does a lot of things well, humble is not one of them.

Beware of a team that has nothing to lose, a chip on its shoulder and is not afraid of you – that can be a lethal combination.

This is the weakest BC squad we’ve faced in a Long time. I’m expecting a total romp this weekend, but considering it’s Senior day in South Bend and what’s happened on some of those of late, I’ll settle for any kind of win.

It’s all about our players’ attitude. If they come in with a chip on their shoulder, there will be nothing the Eagles can do. If they do not . . . let the lord save us from our own inability to get up for every game. Both running backs should get a hundred. Rees passes for nearly 300. Kelly lets up on them so it’s only 49-21.

I’ve already seen a few BC fans being completely obnoxious jerks this morning. Many of them have beer muscles and they feel they are going to win today. I wonder if our team and fans will stand for that.

Pitt and BC seemed to use the same blueprint against us. Drop about 7,8 and even 9 at times, and mix up the pressure. Since Rees is not a running QB, this stacks up heavily against him and consequently the offense. Against sound tackling teams, our offense seems to sputter. I’m just thankful our defense is good enough to account for that.

As for the Rees bashing – come on guys, just look at teams around the country to figure it out – Texas has a true QB in there that, even though talented, is doing squat for his offense. I think that Kelly thinks that Rees, though limited, gives us the best opportunity to win. Say what you will say, but you can’t pin him on the Michigan loss – the secondary forgot to cover and play football. The USF game? He played half of it, and only came it when we were in a hole. USC? We were defeated on all sides of the game, plain and simple.

You just can’t pin everything on him – the losses, the close wins. Sometimes you just have grind ‘em out games and you have to come out on top one way or another. ND did that today and I’m proud of our guys fighting through a BC team that seemed to have a chip on their shoulder and seemed to know the Kelly playbook frontwards and backwards.

That being said, I am looking forward to seeing Hendrix getting some playing time next year, if not sooner.